FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Lawsuit Settlement Big Advance For Wild Steelhead Recovery
Wild Fish Conservancy and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
(WDFW) have settled the lawsuit filed by the Conservancy March 31,
2014.
Apr 25, 2014
WILD FISH CONSERVANCY
PO Box 402 Duvall, WA 98019 • Tel 425-788-1167 • Fax 425-788-9634
info@wildfishconservancy.org
Contact: Kurt Beardslee, Wild Fish Conservancy, 425-788-1167
Brian Knutsen, Smith and Lowney, PLLC, 971-373-8692
Friday April 25, 2014
Lawsuit Settlement Big Advance For Wild Steelhead Recovery
Wild Fish Conservancy and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
(WDFW) have settled the lawsuit filed by the Conservancy March 31, 2014
seeking Endangered Species Act (ESA) compliance for WDFW’s “Chambers
Creek” hatchery winter steelhead programs. Since the first listing of
Puget Sound salmon under the ESA in 1999, almost all of WDFW’s hatchery
programs in the region have continued to produce and release hatchery
salmonids without the evaluation and legal permission required under the
ESA. Under the settlement, WDFW will cease planting Chambers Creek
hatchery steelhead in all Puget Sound rivers but one, until NOAA
approves each specific hatchery program. The settlement also
establishes a twelve-year moratorium of such hatchery plants in the
Skagit River system, Puget Sound’s largest tributary and most important
wild steelhead river.
“This agreement is a giant win for Puget Sound's wild steelhead and their recovery,” said Kurt Beardslee, executive director of Wild Fish Conservancy.
Contrary to popular belief, the Chambers Creek hatchery programs, like
many hatchery programs, do not aid wild fish recovery. Recent scientific
evidence indicates that this hatchery-origin steelhead adversely
affects wild steelhead
by causing negative genetic, ecological, and demographic effects. In
2010, scientists from the regional science center of the NOAA Fisheries
Service concluded “Chambers Creek steelhead have no role in the recovery
of native Puget Sound steelhead.” WDFW is required to develop
“hatchery genetic management plans” for each hatchery which must then be
reviewed and approved by NOAA to ensure that the proposed programs do
not significantly impede the recovery of ESA-listed salmon and
steelhead. The vast majority of WDFW salmon and steelhead hatcheries
have been operating without this approval for more then ten years.
Taxpayers are supporting and funding many important efforts across the
region to restore wild salmon and steelhead, but tax dollars are also
supporting some state hatchery programs that are working at cross
purposes and impeding recovery. WDFW’s data show that the cost to
produce a single harvested Skagit River Chambers Creek hatchery
steelhead ranged from $160 to $940 in the years from 2001-2012. "Our
hope is that the funds supporting these programs will be redirected to
more effective, long-term, and sustainable solutions like habitat
restoration and preservation," says Beardslee.
In 1969, the steelhead was declared Washington’s official “state fish.”
Despite that recognition, wild Puget Sound steelhead populations have
steadily declined. Since being listed as threatened under the ESA in
2007, the five-year average of Puget Sound wild steelhead
abundance is about 25% of what it was in 2004, and less than 3% of what
it was in 1900. NOAA recently rated twelve of twenty Puget Sound
populations as having a “high” risk of extinction.
“There are four major causes for the decline of salmon and steelhead,”
Beardslee continued. “Loss of habitat is the largest problem facing
salmon and steelhead recovery. The public has invested hundreds of
millions of dollars in habitat restoration and preservation and we need
to continue this important work. But science clearly points to dams,
hatcheries, and over-harvest as three additional problems that need to
be fixed. Applying science-based hatchery practices is something we can
do right now that will have immediate and long-term positive benefits.
Fisheries all over the world have collapsed because politics, not
science, guided their management. Science remains the best and most
reliable compass to guide recovery and to meet our solemn stewardship
responsibility to future generations.”
The combination of the Puget Sound and Skagit moratoriums is the largest
and most significant effort of its kind on the West Coast. The
moratorium will help protect Puget Sound's wild steelhead
populations from the negative impacts of the Chambers Creek hatchery
programs and will also provide the opportunity to establish the Skagit
River system as the largest wild steelhead
research project of its kind. The information gained from such a
project will help guide and inform future salmon and steelhead recovery
efforts.
“This magnificent fish is an icon of our Northwest culture and
lifestyle,” Beardslee concluded. “Wild steelhead fed indigenous people
for thousands of years and now it is also the sportsman's most prized
fish. Today's agreement will help recover wild steelhead so they can again support sustainable fisheries in the future."
The unpermitted Chambers Creek steelhead hatchery programs in Puget
Sound were the sole subject of the suit, filed in the US District Court
for western Washington in Seattle. The group is represented by Smith
and Lowney, PLLC, of Seattle.
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